US' New "Syrian PM" Yet Another Muslim Brotherhood Extremist

March 19, 2013 (LD) - The Western media eagerly announced that long time US resident Ghassan Hitto was chosen as the new "interim prime minister" of NATO's proxy forces fighting in Syria. While most headlines attempted to focus solely on Hitto's long stay in the US and his role in a tech firm based in Texas, The Globe and Mail reported in their article, "Canadian loses bid to lead Syria's rebels; Ottawa's stance assailed," that:

Ghassan Hitto, a Kurd with links to the Muslim Brotherhood, was elected
in the early hours of Tuesday at a meeting of leading opposition figures
of the Syrian National Coalition.

Mr Hitto, 50, who is believed to have Islamist leanings, received 35 of 49 votes in a meeting of the Syrian National Coalition (SNC) in Istanbul in the early hours yesterday. He was supported by the Muslim Brotherhood, which is a powerful bloc within the opposition.

This latest round of political "musical chairs" is meant to once again clear the board for the West in hopes of confusing the public, while NATO's proxies remain firmly led and comprised primarily of hardcore terrorists and sectarian extremist intent on the ruination of Syria, just as was done in the now decimated North African nation of Libya. Hitto takes the reins of this Western-contrived front from fellow sectarian extremist, Moaz al-Khatib, also an affiliate of the Muslim Brotherhood and an unabashed defender of Al Qaeda's al-Nusra front, who frequently takes credit for the indiscriminate bombings, murder and maiming of civilians across Syria.

Since long before the 2011 violence began, the US, Israel, and Saudi Arabia had conspired to use sectarian extremists, specifically the Muslim Brotherhood and terrorist groups linked directly to Al Qaeda as the main force with which to overthrow the Syrian government, not for "spreading democracy," but specifically to undermine and destroy neighboring Iran and reassert Western hegemony across the Middle East.

"To undermine Iran, which is predominantly Shiite, the Bush
Administration has decided, in effect, to reconfigure its priorities in
the Middle East. In Lebanon, the Administration has coöperated with
Saudi Arabia’s government, which is Sunni, in clandestine operations
that are intended to weaken Hezbollah, the Shiite organization that is
backed by Iran. The U.S. has also taken part in clandestine operations
aimed at Iran and its ally Syria. A by-product of these activities has
been the bolstering of Sunni extremist groups that espouse a militant
vision of Islam and are hostile to America and sympathetic to Al Qaeda."

Hersh's report would also include:

"the Saudi government, with Washington’s approval, would provide funds
and logistical aid to weaken the government of President Bashir Assad,
of Syria. The Israelis believe that putting such pressure on the Assad
government will make it more conciliatory and open to negotiations."

Hersh also reported that a supporter of the Lebanese pro-US-Saudi Hariri faction had met
Dick Cheney in Washington and relayed personally the importance of using
the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria in any move against the ruling
government:

"[Walid] Jumblatt then told me that he had met with Vice-President Cheney in
Washington last fall to discuss, among other issues, the possibility of
undermining Assad. He and his colleagues advised Cheney that, if the
United States does try to move against Syria, members of the Syrian
Muslim Brotherhood would be “the ones to talk to,” Jumblatt said."

The article would continue by explaining how already in 2007 US and Saudi backing had begun benefiting the Brotherhood:

"There is evidence that the Administration’s redirection strategy has
already benefitted the Brotherhood. The Syrian National Salvation Front
is a coalition of opposition groups whose principal members are a
faction led by Abdul Halim Khaddam, a former Syrian Vice-President who
defected in 2005, and the Brotherhood. A former high-ranking C.I.A.
officer told me, “The Americans have provided both political and
financial support. The Saudis are taking the lead with financial
support, but there is American involvement.” He said that Khaddam, who
now lives in Paris, was getting money from Saudi Arabia, with the
knowledge of the White House. (In 2005, a delegation of the Front’s
members met with officials from the National Security Council, according
to press reports.) A former White House official told me that the
Saudis had provided members of the Front with travel documents."

At one point in Hersh's report, it is even admitted that officials from
US ally Saudi Arabia admitted to "controlling" the "religious
fundamentalists." The report states specifically:

"...[Saudi Arabia's] Bandar and other
Saudis have assured the White House that “they will keep a very close
eye on the religious fundamentalists. Their message to us was ‘We’ve
created this movement, and we can control it.’ It’s not that we don’t
want the Salafis to throw bombs; it’s who they throw them at—Hezbollah, Moqtada al-Sadr, Iran, and at the Syrians, if they continue to work with Hezbollah and Iran.”

Also in 2007, the Wall Street Journal would publish a report titled, "To Check Syria, U.S. Explores Bond With Muslim Brothers."
In this report, it was revealed that even in 2007, Syrian opposition
groups were being created from whole-cloth by the US State Department
and paraded around in front of Syria's embassies in the West. The
article begins with one such protest, stating:

On a humid afternoon in late May, about 100 supporters of Syria's
largest exile opposition group, the National Salvation Front, gathered
outside Damascus's embassy here to protest Syrian President Bashar
Assad's rule. The participants shouted anti-Assad slogans and raised
banners proclaiming: "Change the Regime Now."

Later in the article, it would be revealed that the National Salvation
Front (NSF) was in contact with the US State Department and that a
Washington-based consulting firm in fact assisted the NSF in organizing
the rally:

In the weeks before the presidential election, the State Department's
Middle East Partnership Initiative, which promotes regional democracy,
and NSF members met to talk about publicizing Syria's lack of democracy
and low voter turnout, participants say. A Washington-based consulting
firm, C&O Resources Inc., assisted the NSF in its planning for the
May 26 anti-Assad rally at the Syrian embassy, providing media and
political contacts. State Department officials stress they provided no
financial or technical support to the protestors.

And while the Wall Street Journal then, just as the US State Department
and the Western media houses are now portraying the Syrian opposition as
representing a wide range of interests across Syrian society, it was
admitted then, just as it is plainly obvious now, that the sectarian
extremist Muslim Brotherhood was in fact at the very center of the
"uprising:"

One of the NSF's most influential members is the Syrian branch of the
Muslim Brotherhood -- the decades-old political movement active across
the Middle East whose leaders have inspired the terrorist groups Hamas
and al Qaeda. Its Syrian offshoot says it has renounced armed struggle
in favor of democratic reform.

The continuous necessity of the West to rebrand its proxy front stems from the fact that it, along with the Western agenda that created it, lacks any dimension of legitimacy. Combined with the increasingly tenuous reputation of the West's media monopolies and a better informed public, the lifespan of each new proxy is decreasing exponentially.

Hitto has yet to form a "government," and already his ties to extremists are being exposed - even by other members of his own contrived front - perhaps realizing the difficulties that lie ahead with disasters like Libya and Egypt smoldering behind. Any aid or political support the US, UK, France, and its partners in the Middle East including Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar attempt to lend Hitto's foreign-contrived government will be done so with the public's full understanding that such support is being willfully given to sectarian extremists who not only fail to represent the West's ideals of "democracy" or "freedom," but fail to represent even the majority of people living in Syria.

Yet despite these apparently insurmountable difficulties, should the West pick a leader not affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood and its terrorist spin-offs, the opposition in Syria would splinter and collapse - because the "secular moderates" the White House keeps telling the world about, simply do not exist. Its otherwise irrational insistence on propping up one discredited Muslim Brotherhood dictator after another is clearly indicative of this.